When it tells you to divide by a certain decimal it really will return an answer bigger than the number you started with because it is like multiplication.
Exactly the same way you do when they're all whole numbers, or there are more than three numbers, or they're a mixture of whole numbers and decimals: -- Add up all the numbers on the list. -- Divide the big sum by the number of items on the list.
19.5 is bigger than 11 as both 19 and 11 are whole numbers.
yes 0.14 bigger
No. All numbers greater than zero are positive real numbers. Integers are whole numbers (positive or negative) and therefore, don't include numbers with decimals.
well look at the decimals if the first is bigger than its usally bigger the more numbers the smaller it is
When it tells you to divide by a certain decimal it really will return an answer bigger than the number you started with because it is like multiplication.
in dividing decimals you never get a remainder and in dividing whole numbers you do. +++ More to the point perhaps, you are working in powers of 10 all the time.
Decimals are just numbers. If you can tell that 47 is greater than 32, then you can tell that 0.47 is greater than 0.32
Exactly the same way you do when they're all whole numbers, or there are more than three numbers, or they're a mixture of whole numbers and decimals: -- Add up all the numbers on the list. -- Divide the big sum by the number of items on the list.
The set of whole numbers includes all numbers greater than 0 that do not require decimals to be expressed. Because -16 is less than 0, it is not a whole number. It is an integer.
9,000 of them are
Oh, what a happy little question! When comparing decimals, think about them as whole numbers. In this case, 0.304 is greater than 0.034 because 304 is bigger than 34. Just remember, there are no mistakes in painting or math, only happy little accidents!
19.5 is bigger than 11 as both 19 and 11 are whole numbers.
yes 0.14 bigger
No. All numbers greater than zero are positive real numbers. Integers are whole numbers (positive or negative) and therefore, don't include numbers with decimals.
"Ascending order" means each one is bigger or higher than the one before it. It doesn't matter whether they're fractions, whole numbers, mixed numbers, temperatures, costs, weights, volumes, decimals, etc.